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Accelerated marine carbon cycling forced by tectonic degassing over the Miocene Climate Optimum.

Authors :
Liu, Fenghao
Du, Jinlong
Huang, Enqing
Ma, Wentao
Ma, Xiaolin
Lourens, Lucas J.
Tian, Jun
Source :
Science Bulletin. Mar2024, Vol. 69 Issue 6, p823-832. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] Global warming during the Miocene Climate Optimum (MCO, ∼17–14 million years ago) is associated with massive carbon emissions sourced from the flood basalt volcanism and ocean crustal production. However, the perturbation of tectonic carbon degassing on the interaction between climate change and carbon cycle remains unclear. Here, through time-evolutive phase analysis of new and published high-resolution benthic foraminiferal oxygen (δ 18O) and carbon (δ 13C) isotope records from the global ocean, we find that variations in the marine carbon cycle lead the climate-cryosphere system (δ 13C-lead- δ 18O) on 405,000-year eccentricity timescales during the MCO. This is in contrast to the previously reported climate-lead-carbon (δ 18O-lead- δ 13C) scenario during most of the Oligo-Miocene (∼34–6 million years ago). Further sensitivity analysis and model simulations suggest that the elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentrations and the resulting greenhouse effect strengthened the low-latitude hydrological cycle during the MCO, accelerating the response of marine carbon cycle to eccentricity forcing. Tropical climate processes played a more important role in regulating carbon-cycle variations when Earth's climate was in a warm regime, as opposed to the dominant influence of polar ice-sheet dynamics during the Plio-Pleistocene (after ∼6 million years ago). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20959273
Volume :
69
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science Bulletin
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176225484
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scib.2023.12.052